US5582807A - Method and apparatus for removing particulate and gaseous pollutants from a gas stream - Google Patents
Method and apparatus for removing particulate and gaseous pollutants from a gas stream Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US5582807A US5582807A US08/334,595 US33459594A US5582807A US 5582807 A US5582807 A US 5582807A US 33459594 A US33459594 A US 33459594A US 5582807 A US5582807 A US 5582807A
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- gas stream
- solution
- gas
- mist
- absorption agent
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01D—SEPARATION
- B01D53/00—Separation of gases or vapours; Recovering vapours of volatile solvents from gases; Chemical or biological purification of waste gases, e.g. engine exhaust gases, smoke, fumes, flue gases, aerosols
- B01D53/34—Chemical or biological purification of waste gases
- B01D53/74—General processes for purification of waste gases; Apparatus or devices specially adapted therefor
- B01D53/77—Liquid phase processes
- B01D53/79—Injecting reactants
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01D—SEPARATION
- B01D47/00—Separating dispersed particles from gases, air or vapours by liquid as separating agent
- B01D47/06—Spray cleaning
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01D—SEPARATION
- B01D53/00—Separation of gases or vapours; Recovering vapours of volatile solvents from gases; Chemical or biological purification of waste gases, e.g. engine exhaust gases, smoke, fumes, flue gases, aerosols
- B01D53/34—Chemical or biological purification of waste gases
- B01D53/46—Removing components of defined structure
- B01D53/48—Sulfur compounds
- B01D53/50—Sulfur oxides
- B01D53/501—Sulfur oxides by treating the gases with a solution or a suspension of an alkali or earth-alkali or ammonium compound
Definitions
- This invention relates to flue gas conditioning, more particularly to a method for removing particulate and gaseous pollutants from flue gas using very fine mists of gas absorbing solution prior to discharge of the gas into atmosphere.
- Electrostatic precipitators Generally, several methods of removing particulates from a gas stream are known.
- One method employs the use of electrostatic precipitators to precipitate electrically charged particles out of a gas stream.
- Electrostatic precipitators require large quantities of energy and present safety problems.
- Another method of removing pollutants uses impinging devices which provide barriers or packing to impinge on gas flow. As the gas moves through the system the particulates impact the obstructions and drop out of the gas stream. These devices are unsatisfactory, however, because the particulates collect in the packing and cause plugging and waste removal problems.
- the most common method of treating flue gas to remove pollutants includes spraying water or mist onto the gas stream to suppress the particulate matter.
- Various types of these devices known as wet scrubbers, are in wide use. Scrubbers have a major drawback in that their operation requires considerable energy.
- the conventional wet scrubber consists of pressure nozzles that produce droplets in the size range of several hundred microns. Droplets of that size are ineffective in capturing the respirable-size particulates contained in normal contaminates. The larger the size of the mist, the less effective surface area of treating liquid is provided.
- U.S. Pat. No. 5,039,315 to Liao, et al. provides a method and apparatus for separating particulates from a gas stream.
- Other, relevant patents include U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,810,268, to Chambers et al; 4,401,644 to Teller; 4,345,916 to Richards et al; 4,269,812, 4,343,771, and 4,102,982 all to Edwards et al; 3,957,464, to Teller; 3,948,608 to Edwards et al; and 2,579,282, to Vicard.
- the methods may remove large particulate matter but are not as effective for the removal of small particulate matter, down to about five microns, or gaseous pollutants from the gas stream.
- Another object of the present invention to provide a method for removing particulate and gaseous pollutants in which the gas is contacted with a solution containing an absorption agent.
- It is another object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus for removal of particulate and gaseous pollutants from a gas stream in which the contact solution is recovered and recirculated to conserve solution and energy.
- Still another object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus for the removal of particulate and gaseous pollutants from a gas stream in which the gas is contacted with an ulltrafine mist to provide large surface area to enhance the gas absorptive capacity of the solution.
- a still further object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus for the removal of particulate and gaseous pollutants from the gas stream which uses a twin fluid atomizer in which air and solution are mixed in a nozzle to create an ultrafine mist, with the majority of the mist sizes being less than fifty microns, and the average mist size being less than twenty microns.
- Another object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus for removal of particulate and gaseous pollutants from a gas stream that can be retrofitted to existing systems requiring flue gas conditioning.
- a method and apparatus for removing particulate and gaseous pollutants from a gas stream in which the gas, containing the particulates and gaseous pollutants, is presaturated in a presaturation section by contact with a coarse spray of recirculated solution to reduce the incoming gas to the water dewpoint and saturate the gas with water.
- the gas is then contacted with an ultrafine mist of fresh solution in a primary contacting section.
- the ultrafine mist provides a large surface area which enhances the gas absorptive capacity of the solution.
- the ultrafine mist is generated by one or more twin fluid atomizers wherein air and solution are mixed in a nozzle to create the ultrafine mist.
- mist droplets are less than fifty microns in diameter.
- the average mist size is twenty microns.
- the gas moves to a secondary contacting area wherein the gas is contacted with a coarse spray of recirculated solution. Finally, the gas moves through a demister, if necessary, to remove any entrained mists prior to discharge into the environment.
- Usable solution is recovered and recirculated to the presaturation section and the secondary contacting area.
- Fresh solution is injected into the system at the primary contacting section to provide additional absorption agent. Unusable spent solution is continuously bled to withdraw spent absorption agent and collected particulates. Makeup water can be added to the recirculated solution or to the fresh solution.
- FIG. 1 is a schematic of the method and apparatus of the present invention
- FIG. 2 is a block diagram illustrating the method of the present invention.
- FIG. 3 is a block diagram illustrating an alternative method of the present invention.
- FIG. 1 contains an overall schematic of the present invention.
- the system indicated generally by reference numeral 10, is divided into four sections.
- the sections include a presaturation section, a primary contacting section, secondary contacting section, and a demisting section.
- Each of the sections, as illustrated in FIG. 1, will be described in greater detail hereinafter.
- Section 1 is the presaturation section.
- the gas is treated with water to be saturated to the dew point. This can be accomplished by spraying the gas with fresh or waste water.
- Section 1 employs a plurality of conventional nozzles, properly aimed upstream, as shown. Nozzles 12 produce a relatively coarse mist.
- the preferred method is to contact the gas with recirculated solution or waste water captured from the system, as will be described below.
- the purpose of the section 1 is to presaturate the gas with water so little or no evaporation takes place in the primary contacting section. Without the presaturation section, water used to dispense the absorption agent in the primary contacting section will evaporate, retarding the ability of airborne pollutants to react with the absorption agent.
- the presaturation section 1 also cools the gas.
- Section 2 is the primary contacting area.
- Fresh solution is used to treat the gas.
- the fresh solution contains an absorption agent, such as sodium carbonate or sodium hydroxide.
- an ultrafine mist is created via one or more twin fluid atomizers 14.
- the finely divided mist rapidly absorbs the gaseous pollutants and creates a waste solution having particulate agglomerates.
- the fine mist created by the twin fluid atomizers 14 provides a large surface area of mist which enhances the gas absorption ability of the method and apparatus.
- the rate of gaseous pollutant absorbed also can be described by a mass transfer coefficient, multiplied by surface area, multiplied by a driving force.
- the driving force is the concentration of the pollutant in the gas phase since the reaction with the absorption agent is rapid compared to the mass transfer.
- twin fluid atomizers 14 air and solution are mixed in a nozzle to create an ultrafine mist.
- the majority of the mist droplets created are less than fifty microns in diameter.
- the average mist droplet size obtainable is twenty microns in diameter.
- the twin fluid atomizer 14, by utilizing the action of compressed air and water, creates an ultrafine mist with a larger nozzle orifice while utilizing a relatively low pressure, i.e. less than 100 psi.
- the rate of gas absorption in section 1 is enhanced, at least by a factor of fifty, using the twin fluid atomizing nozzle.
- Constriction 16 allows an overall pressure drop on the order of 1 to 2 inches of water column.
- Section 3 is the secondary contacting area.
- the gas is contacted with relatively large or coarse mists created by a plurality of conventional hydraulic nozzles 18. Such mist droplets would be on the order of 100 microns.
- This section may contain banks of nozzles 18 or stages of spraying.
- the solution provided through the sprayers in section 3 is recirculated solution captured from section 2. The use of the recirculated solution enhances the total utilization of the absorption agent in the solution, decreases energy consumption, and conserves water.
- Section 4 is the demisting area.
- the demisters 20 are conventional and can be either chevrons or demister pads or a combination thereof. In general, water washing of the demister pads is required. Thus each demister stage will have cleaning sprays 22.
- Sprays 22 can supply makeup water to the system to maintain an appropriate volume of recirculated solution.
- Cleaning sprays 22 generally are pulsed on or off as determined by either a detected need for water washing or by a timing mechanism. After demisting, the flue gas can be released into the environment.
- section 1 can be eliminated by supplying excess water in the fresh solution used in section 2, the primary contacting section. In general, it is preferred, and the process more easily controlled, simply to use coarse hydraulic nozzles 12 in section 1 as previously described.
- sections 2 and 3 can use a variety of different atomizer arrangements.
- the atomizers 14 can be attached to the vessel wall or suspended directly in the gas phase.
- the twin fluid atomizers 14 creating very fine mists are used in section 2, it is possible to use a second bank of twin fluid atomizers in section 3 (not shown).
- the recirculated solution then would be provided in a smaller mist size, for example twenty to fifty microns, to increase the surface area of recirculated solution provided in section 3.
- demisting can take place in several sections of the unit depending upon the desired result.
- an upstream or first water system could be used to remove particulates.
- the gas would be demisted and proceed down stream.
- the water containing particulates from the first system can be recaptured and the particulates removed.
- the spent water can be mixed with an absorption agent and then incorporated into the second system.
- nozzles and atomizers as shown in sections 1, 2, and 3 can be oriented to spray either upstream or downstream.
- nozzles 12 in section 1 should be pointed upstream, as shown. This configuration sprays the solution containing absorption agent into the incoming gas stream and washes off particulate buildup on nozzle 12 as the gas passes by. In general, therefore, it appears optimal to use nozzles 12 spraying into the gas stream in section 1, the presaturation stage.
- Atomizers 14 in section 2, however, should be targeted downstream toward the slight constriction 16.
- Nozzles 18 in the secondary contacting area, section 3, should be mounted on the side of the vessel and pointed up stream as shown.
- the system employs cleaning nozzles 22 for the demisters, they should be mounted upstream of demisters 20 and pointed toward demisters 20 to remove deposits which generally build up on the leading edge of the demister.
- the number of nozzles and atomizers used in each section is optional.
- the number of nozzles employed in the system illustrated in FIG. 1 depends upon the geometry of both the spray pattern formed by the nozzles and by the exact geometry of the walls of the vessel used. However, in all cases, the nozzle spray patterns must contact the entire gas stream as evenly as possible. This is particularly important for the atomizers 14 in section 2.
- FIG. 2 A diagram of a method of the preferred embodiment is shown in FIG. 2.
- a flue gas containing coal particulates and sulfur dioxide from coal processing, is conditioned prior to release into the atmosphere.
- the flue gas prior to entering into the apparatus proper, is sprayed with recirculated solution. This corresponds to section 1 of FIG. 1, or "presaturation”.
- recirculated solution is pumped by a recirculation pump 30 for presaturation.
- the duct work 32 is sloped or vertical to allow the sprayed solution to flow into the spent solution surge tank 34 without the need for additional drainage.
- the gas After saturation with water in the duct work, the gas enters the system proper 10 and is contacted in the primary contacting area or section 2 (FIG. 1). Fresh sodium carbonate solution is pumped via the fresh solution pump 36 and combined with compressed air through the twin fluid atomizers 14. At this stage the gas is contacted with ultrafine mists of absorption solution created by the twin fluid atomizers.
- constriction 16 is orientated to allow drainage directly into the section 3, the secondary contacting vessel. This arrangement eliminates additional drainage.
- the gas is contacted by usable, recirculated spent absorption solution via recirculation pump 30. After this section, the gas flows through a demister 20 shown as two sets of chevrons 38, 39. The gas is demisted and then discharged.
- the unusable spent absorption solution in this case containing sodium sulfite, sodium biocarbonate, sodium sulfate, and traces of sodium carbonate, along with collected coal particles, is bled out of the process via recirculation pump 30 and discharged to a pond (not shown).
- a drainage system 40 inside secondary contacting area, section 3 recovers all the solution from the presaturations sprays, atomizing sprays, the second contacting sprays, and the demister.
- Fresh water is used to wash demisters 20 and provides makeup water to replace water lost in the presaturation section.
- the preferred embodiment uses only two pumps 30, 36. Clearly, more pumps could be used if needed. For instance, a separate pump could be provided to pump the discharged material into the pond. Furthermore, separate pumps could be used to recirculate solution back to the presaturation area or the secondary contacting stages.
- the preferred embodiment can use a Kellogg-Weir scrubber or a similar kind of device having several stages of gas contacting provided by nozzles mounted on the walls of the secondary contacting section to spray the recirculated solution in a crossflow pattern.
- Kellogg-Weir scrubber or a similar kind of device having several stages of gas contacting provided by nozzles mounted on the walls of the secondary contacting section to spray the recirculated solution in a crossflow pattern.
- the preferred embodiment also uses a single drain system 40 in section 3, the secondary contacting area.
- the preferred embodiment, illustrated in FIG. 2, is designed for removing sulfur dioxide and coal particulates from a gas using a solution of sodium carbonate as the gaseous pollutant absorption agent.
- a different absorption agent such as sodium hydroxide
- the spent solution is regenerated by removing particulates and thereby regenerating the absorption agent.
- sodium hydroxide as the absorption agent, it should be noted that regeneration produces sulfuric acid as a byproduct.
- Control of the system is accomplished in several ways.
- One method for controlling the system is to set the inlet flow rate of fresh solution based upon the pH of the spent solution in the spent solution surge tank 34 or flowing from the tank.
- the outlet flow rate of the spent solution to the pond is then adjusted to be equal to the inlet flow rate.
- the flow of the spent solution to the pond is maintained at a desired rate so as to maintain a certain particulate slurry concentration, to facilitate the pumping, or to maintain a known salt solution concentration so as to prevent precipitation of salts in the piping.
- the pond (not shown) may be an evaporation pond of limited liquid capacity so that the outflow can be maintained to concentrate the water to the extent that pumping problems or precipitation do not occur in the piping.
- the concentration within the piping and pond are controlled so as to minimize evaporative loads on the pond.
- FIG. 3 illustrates an alternative embodiment of the method and apparatus of the present invention.
- the apparatus and method as provided in FIG. 3, allow primary contacting with water only to create a slurry containing particulates.
- the particulates are removed and added to a slurry for particulate recovery. Free water is recovered.
- the gas is demisted.
- the particulate slurry, as well as the water, is recovered from the demister.
- the gas moves to primary and secondary contacting sections which function the same as the primary and secondary contacting areas of the method illustrated in FIG. 1.
- gaseous pollutants are absorbed.
- Spent solution is recovered and regenerated.
- Usable regenerated absorption agent is returned to the process.
- Byproducts are eliminated. For example, if sodium hydroxide is used as the absorption agent, a sulfuric acid byproduct is generated.
- the cleaned flue gas enters a second demisting stage and is then discharged into the environment as clean flue gas.
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US08/334,595 US5582807A (en) | 1994-11-04 | 1994-11-04 | Method and apparatus for removing particulate and gaseous pollutants from a gas stream |
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US08/334,595 US5582807A (en) | 1994-11-04 | 1994-11-04 | Method and apparatus for removing particulate and gaseous pollutants from a gas stream |
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US6623706B2 (en) | 2000-06-20 | 2003-09-23 | Advanced Electron Beams, Inc. | Air sterilizing system |
US6623705B2 (en) | 2000-06-20 | 2003-09-23 | Advanced Electron Beams, Inc. | Gas conversion system |
US6898936B1 (en) | 2002-12-04 | 2005-05-31 | The United States Of America As Represented By The United States Department Of Energy | Compression stripping of flue gas with energy recovery |
US7007474B1 (en) | 2002-12-04 | 2006-03-07 | The United States Of America As Represented By The United States Department Of Energy | Energy recovery during expansion of compressed gas using power plant low-quality heat sources |
US20060076507A1 (en) * | 2000-06-20 | 2006-04-13 | Advanced Electron Beams, Inc. | Air Sterilizing system |
US20060210461A1 (en) * | 2005-03-18 | 2006-09-21 | Lurgi Lentjes Ag | Flue gas purification device having an essentially horizontal through flow |
US20070041885A1 (en) * | 2005-08-18 | 2007-02-22 | Maziuk John Jr | Method of removing sulfur dioxide from a flue gas stream |
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US7481987B2 (en) | 2005-09-15 | 2009-01-27 | Solvay Chemicals | Method of removing sulfur trioxide from a flue gas stream |
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US7547892B2 (en) | 2000-06-20 | 2009-06-16 | Advanced Electron Beams, Inc. | Air sterilizing system |
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